 My name is Denise Oldham and I'm the Title IX Officer and the Director of the Office for the Prevention of Harassment and Discrimination. As the Title IX Officer on the Berkeley campus, my job is to investigate and respond to complaints of sexual harassment and sexual violence. And under Title IX, we have a very specific obligation to stop harassment and violence, prevent it, the impact of that harassment and violence, and to address the effects of that. And what that really looks like is us responding to complaints and doing investigations on campus. And when we do that kind of work, we're not allowed to take a side. So we can't advocate for the person bringing the complaint forward or for the person responding to the complaint. And that can be tough. These are really difficult situations where everyone's in pain, some people have been physically hurt, emotionally hurt, and our job is to gather all the information from those folks and try to find out whether a policy has been violated. And that may seem like a straightforward process, but it's not. And we have to make sure that we can through that work take care of everyone who's involved. One of the things that we have to remember when students come forward to report issues of sexual violence is that it takes a lot of courage to even come forward. Sexual violence is very underreported in society. And of course, the students on our campus are no different. So when they have come forward, they've thought about it, they're afraid, they don't know what's going to happen at the end. So they're giving us a great deal of their vulnerability to care for while we're working with them. And we take that really seriously.